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Forty Years I Heard the Same Sentence, and Each Time It Felt Like a Crown on My Head: “My Wife Doesn…
For forty years, I heard the same sentence, each time with a flourish that felt like a tiara balanced on my head.
My wife doesnt work. Shes the queen of the house.
People would smile knowingly. Some admired me, others, I suspect, quietly envied me.
And me? I believed it.
I honestly believed I was important, that I was valued, that what I did was the biggest job in Britain.
It really was a job even if no one seemed to call it that. I was chef, cleaner, childminder, teacher, nurse, counsellor, chauffeur, accountant, event planner, and general fixer of all things. I worked 14-hour days, sometimes more. No days off. No salary. No cheers, love! when I needed to hear it most.
There was only one refrain: Well, youre at home. Youre fine.
My children never left for school in grubby uniforms. My husband never came home to anything less than a warm meal. Our house was always spotless. My life was arranged so that everyone else was comfortable, peaceful even if I myself was wilting inside.
There were days Id catch my reflection in the mirror and didnt see a woman at all.
I saw a collection of roles.
But I told myself, This is family. This is love. This is my choice.
My consolation was that all of it was ours.
Our home.
Our money.
Our life.
But the truth turned out to be something altogether different.
When my husband went off to meet his maker, my world didnt just collapse with grief. It crumbled with reality.
We wept. People called him a top bloke, the provider, the backbone of the family.
Then came the day the will was read.
I stood as a widow hands knotted and heart aching hoping for at least a little certainty, a little bit of protection after all those years Id given.
And thats when I heard words that made me feel like a stranger in my own life.
The house was in his name.
The bank account was in his name.
Everything, it turned out, was in his name.
And in a heartbeat, ours became his.
My children my very own inherited what Id tended, scrubbed and kept up for a lifetime.
And me?
I had no claim to say even, Thats mine too.
From then on, I lived in the most humbling fashion not quite poor, but utterly dependent.
I had to ask:
Could I buy some medicine?
Could I get myself new shoes?
Would it be alright to colour my hair?
It was as if I hadnt turned 70, but reverted instantly to a little girl asking for pocket money.
Sometimes Id clutch my shopping list in the supermarket and wonder How is it possible?
How is it possible I worked forty years and my labour means nothing?
It wasnt just the lack of money that stung.
I hurt because Id been hoodwinked.
Because Id worn a crown of compliments, not a crown of security.
Because I was queen without a single right.
And thats when the questions began the ones Id never let myself ask:
Where exactly was I in this love?
Where was my name?
Where on earth was my future?
And most of all why did I once think having my own money was somehow a lack of trust?
I see now.
Having your own income, your own account, your own pension, your own property its not a betrayal of love.
Its self-respect.
Love should never leave you unprotected.
Love shouldnt take all your strength and let you beg for scraps.
A lesson is learned:
A woman may give her whole life to the home but the home should make room for her not just in the kitchen, but in its rights, its security, and its finances.
Home labour is worthy.
But dependence thats a trap.
Question for you:
Do you know a woman who was the queen of the household only to end up without rights and without a future of her own?
